| Literature DB >> 30870413 |
Thomas W Gould1,2, Bertha Dominguez1, Fred de Winter1,3, Gene W Yeo4, Patrick Liu4, Balaji Sundararaman2, Thomas Stark2, Anthony Vu2, Jay L Degen5, Weichun Lin6, Kuo-Fen Lee1.
Abstract
Glial cells regulate multiple aspects of synaptogenesis. In the absence of Schwann cells, a peripheral glial cell, motor neurons initially innervate muscle but then degenerate. Here, using a genetic approach, we show that neural activity-regulated negative factors produced by muscle drive neurodegeneration in Schwann cell-deficient mice. We find that thrombin, the hepatic serine protease central to the hemostatic coagulation cascade, is one such negative factor. Trancriptomic analysis shows that expression of the antithrombins serpin C1 and D1 is significantly reduced in Schwann cell-deficient mice. In the absence of peripheral neuromuscular activity, neurodegeneration is completely blocked, and expression of prothrombin in muscle is markedly reduced. In the absence of muscle-derived prothrombin, neurodegeneration is also markedly reduced. Together, these results suggest that Schwann cells regulate NMJs by opposing the effects of activity-regulated, muscle-derived negative factors and provide the first genetic evidence that thrombin plays a central role outside of the coagulation system.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30870413 PMCID: PMC6417855 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1007948
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Fig 5PAR-1 mediates thrombin-induced developmental synaptic degeneration caused by Schwann cell ablation.
(A) E15.5 diaphragms from the indicated genotypes were dissected and immunostained with antibodies against synaptophysin (green). Note the retention of motor innervation of NMJs in prothrombin (FII), erbB3;FII double mutant (erbB3; FII; bottom right panel) vs. erbB3 single mutant diaphragm (erbB3; bottom left panel). In contrast, there is no difference in the motor innervation between prothrombin wild-type (FII) and mutant (FII) diaphragm (top panels). (B) Muscle-specific elimination of prothrombin in erbB3 mutants (erbB3; FII; Myf5-Cre; bottom panel) results in the rescue of presynaptically innervated NMJs. Scale bar in A-C = 100 μm. (C) PAR1; erbB3 double mutant diaphragm (erbB3; PAR1; bottom panel) also exhibits a rescue of motor innervation, whereas PAR1 single mutant diaphragm is similar to that of PAR1 wild-type (top panel). (D) Quantification of NMJs. The percentage of α-BTX-labeled AChRs apposed to synaptophysin-immunoreactive presynaptic terminals in diaphragm muscle is significantly higher in erbB3 mutants lacking FII, PAR1 or muscle-derived FII when compared to single erbB3 mutants alone (erbB3; FII; Myf5-Cre vs. erbB3; ***P<0.0005, n = 3 diaphragms for each genotype). (E) Lack of muscle-derived prothrombin/FII expression in FII; Myf5-Cre mice, 1,2 = muscle from FII; Myf5-Cre mice (+,- reverse transcriptase; RT); Lanes 3,4 = muscle from Myf5-Cre and FII; Myf5-Cre mice (+,- RT); Lanes 5,6 = muscle from FII mice (+,- RT); Lane 7 = liver from wild-type mice (+RT). β-actin expression from same samples is shown below.
Functional categories of genes upregulated in muscle in the presence of Schwann cells.
| Molecular Function | GO:0030414 | Peptidase inhibitor activity | 4.48E-27 | Endopeptidase inhibitor activity | GO:0004866 | 1.25E-08 |
| GO:0004866 | Endopeptidase inhibitor activity | 3.25E-26 | Serine-type endopeptidase | GO:0004867 | 2.63E-08 | |
| Cellular Component | GO:0005576 | Extracellular region | 1.24E-24 | Extracellular region part | GO:0044421 | 4.76E-17 |
| GO:0005615 | Extracellular space | 4.62E-19 | Extracellular region | GO:0005576 | 5.42E-17 | |
| Biological Process | GO:0009611 | Response to wounding | Response to wounding | GO:0009611 | 0.009146505 | |
| GO:0050817 | Coagulation |
Examples of the most significantly enriched Gene Ontology (GO) terms in the list of upregulated genes in WT vs. erbB3 mutant muscle, as annotated. The P value indicated was corrected for multiple testing using the Benjamini-Hochberg me